AZERBAIJAN'S OPPOSITION TO CHALLENGE PRESIDENTIAL POLL RESULT IN COURT
October 10, 2013 - 13:31 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net - Azerbaijan's opposition said on Thursday, October
10 it would challenge in court President Ilham Aliyev's victory in an
election it said was marred by ballot stuffing and police interference,
according to Reuters.
Aliyev, who succeeded his father in the oil exporting state a decade
ago, won 85 percent of the vote on Wednesday, official results showed,
with nearly all ballots counted. Aliyev controls most levers of power
and media outlets and his victory was a foregone conclusion for many
in the nation of 9 million.
"We'll go to the Constitutional Court and demand that election results
are cancelled," opposition candidate Jamil Hasanly told reporters.
"We gathered many examples of voting violations. There was ballot
stuffing, cases of multiple voting and police interference in the
electoral process."
The Azeri Central Election Commission said it had not received any
complaints of violations.
Azerbaijan's fractured opposition had united for the first time in
a presidential election behind Hasanly, 61, a former lawmaker and
adviser to the late Abulfaz Elchibey, who was president for about a
year in 1992-1993.
Azerbaijan has enjoyed an economic boom fuelled by oil and gas in
the decade since Aliyev, 51, succeeded his father, raising living
standards. But Aliyev has faced criticism at home and abroad over the
government's treatment of its critics. Protests are quickly quashed
and one rights group said a pre-election crackdown had doubled the
number of political prisoners.
http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/171079/
October 10, 2013 - 13:31 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net - Azerbaijan's opposition said on Thursday, October
10 it would challenge in court President Ilham Aliyev's victory in an
election it said was marred by ballot stuffing and police interference,
according to Reuters.
Aliyev, who succeeded his father in the oil exporting state a decade
ago, won 85 percent of the vote on Wednesday, official results showed,
with nearly all ballots counted. Aliyev controls most levers of power
and media outlets and his victory was a foregone conclusion for many
in the nation of 9 million.
"We'll go to the Constitutional Court and demand that election results
are cancelled," opposition candidate Jamil Hasanly told reporters.
"We gathered many examples of voting violations. There was ballot
stuffing, cases of multiple voting and police interference in the
electoral process."
The Azeri Central Election Commission said it had not received any
complaints of violations.
Azerbaijan's fractured opposition had united for the first time in
a presidential election behind Hasanly, 61, a former lawmaker and
adviser to the late Abulfaz Elchibey, who was president for about a
year in 1992-1993.
Azerbaijan has enjoyed an economic boom fuelled by oil and gas in
the decade since Aliyev, 51, succeeded his father, raising living
standards. But Aliyev has faced criticism at home and abroad over the
government's treatment of its critics. Protests are quickly quashed
and one rights group said a pre-election crackdown had doubled the
number of political prisoners.
http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/171079/